VOL. 41. Uhe Huntingdon Journal. J. R. DI - MORROW PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS, ()glee in new JOURNAL Building, Fifth Street TIIE JOI 7 RNAL is published every Friday by J. R. Ingeotittow and J. A. NASH, under the firm WHIIO of J. R. DITRH/RRVW Co., at per enntlill IN AHV‘NCE, or VISO if not paid for in Hit months fr,,a t .late of subscription, and f 3 if not paid within the N , . pm), .114r..nt itinp:l, unless at the option of the pub lidhors, until ali arr,aragei are paid. N , l paper, le,werer, will be lent out of the State unless abc„iutrS` aid for in a.ivanre. Tra , isient ..I,rti+i•fni•iiti will be inserted at Twri.irs AND A-HALIt CENTi per , Fie for the tiro in•i , rti.,n, SzvEN AND A-HAL? , ENT4 f r t and FINS c,Nrs per live for .11 R.gilar irt rly an , l early will IY Ine,rtt l at the Om • I yr Or' I •PI 1 Comm m AN t. an I ~f 'T •- ar! Will r... L, (.lA:4,d f 4 the party 1.,•_i1 an I n• it hav i n z thlnft rrinat fltvl thPir of fi A7l tr,rminlx Ore dv, aw: c4llrctibl• who, f oil. Gnr, PvPry Pl.i , awl Fancy r,lora, and c1i.p. , 11. nlank,a. provriN( don. Vrit'l fin- *l-.•• tto• I, IKI•3 Proon fl I ( a rd I,IWEI,L, Mforne U. f.rra-r:y prrf ir.l i.y 4' T4. a.~a:. K T) ' ' •tr wr" r 'MTV dC f'sr .r ess.t. 1.0 F J. Grfr,,, If nrill:•xl 4,, PA P. ',MA DV. Attie'', .740-..1...1e, I'.r.-1 ifn:ol,ol, , n, Pa. , r,,,17;;:r fir 1. f' .1, ,Mt, in T RY,Sito'46,lg U. Vetin Ar tbot, 1 13146,04,40 t., i'41.11,71 IIW. 1;12:ill:VAN, fhriown bel,!•bart, No . ittr.o4, lint, 114 I( M Ofir,M, Att,frfry- ad -firw, Offp,, N 6. { , ro, i • .Air , e, it orstirrivt . th, i'v, xy14,71 YRANKI,I% Amerroi-O-Law, finttl:ng • 4,r, Pc rownrl,4 giv.* W sal P-Kaa Imo! , resew, 015,f, Tr/ Y.i n Iftreetl, ',e 1...1' of lAmrt ;Pm., /haw, j OCTINANPA KAM Amar..744.1,aw, Illest4nwPra, 0. Pa, OAP*, Prat, tut.* 4.44 1..44 3rd Pitr.ot, :iseof,ll W, AIT EX% Gted.fal el • A:v-6f 110 tit ori/4 PA, o...,i,lont.",,:siss•A4xAtioet Grorrtsuwn Grr Im• Ireptity, * id,rgo*f arr 4 ft•Ali , f porwiqu• icsto, .14 444 yr , /woo., , P!- S.. 914 relits TU. 101:1 1 116111017, Attqrroiwt-Law, Pa„ . will prarsow in dm wnforsl (ions. .4 111 n0t0r,x4,4, connty. Psrti , u4r stiontn,n givens VI oboe rertrirrtudrrt '4 *situ* <4 4,..1m15t5, (1111., hi dm, jrickirm, f 11, r,Ell66llx4r,R,Atb,niey4444aw sag IG4sary JI. liensengbots, Pa. Ofik,, No. V// Ptiits Nitt:•l,:44ro , WO Court limsom, D A. °WIMPY, Ationso-avtAw. Patout* 01Asko& Ito. 0W4,021 Ptus Street, lirstiog4ma, Pa, ita)3l,ll Q x, FLEMINO, Attorsepat-Lw, ifirstingtlon, Offtra in Missitnr. beilding, Penn ittro.i. Prompt awl careful JOU-Fitton itiv/m t 4 all kcal buoiewea. (5a0,74-Ginda WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Atioriaryiit,Law, Boating don, I's Special attentlou given to collectiotio, and all do.iira I.ltal Laueinowa att,uiledt, with "Art awl prom:go...v. Office, No. TA Y.-on Street. Miscellaneous. MARK THESE FACTS ! The Testimony of the Whole World. HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT. BAD LEGS, BAD BREASTS, SORES AND ULCERS. All descriptions of eoree are remediable by the proper and diligent use of this inestimable preparation. To at tempt to cure bad legs by plastering the edges of the wound together is a folly ; for should the akin unite, a bog gy diseased condition remains underneath to break out with tenfold fury in a few days. The only rational and succemeful treatment, as indicated by nature, is to reduce the inflammation in and about the wound and to soothe the neighboring pirrts by rubbing in plenty of the Oint ment as salt is forced into meat. This will cause the malignant humors to be drained eff from the hard, swol len and discolored party round about the wound, sore, or ulcer, and when these humors are removed, the wounds themselves will soon heal ; warm bread and water poul t ices applied over the affected parts, after the Ointment has been well rubbed In, will soothe and soften the same, and greatly assist the cure. There is a description of ulcer, sore and swelling, which need not be named here, attendant upon the follies of youth, and for which this Ointment is urgently recommended as a sovereign reme dy. In curingsuch poisonous sores it never fails to restore the system to a healthy state if the Pills be taken accord ing to the printed instructions. DIPTIIERIA, ULCERATED SORE THROAT, AND SCARLET AND OTHER FEVERS. Any of the above diseases may be cured by well rub biug the Ointment three timesa day into the chest, throat, and neck el the patient, it will soon penetrate, and give immediate relief. Medicine taken by the mouth must rpe.rate upon the whole system ere its influence can be felt in any local part, whereas the Ointment will do its work at once. Whoever tries the unguent in the above manner for the diseases named, or any similar disorders affecting the chest and throat, will find themselves re lieved as by a charm. All sufferers from these complaints should envelop the throat at bedtime in a large bread and water poultice, after the Ointment has been well rubbed in ; it will greatly assist the cure of the throat and chest. To allay the fever and lessen the inflammation, eight or ten Pills should be taken night and morning. The Oint ment will produce perspiration, the grand essential in all cases of fevers, sore throat, or where there might be an oppression of the chest, either from asthma or ether causes. PILE 3, FISTULAS, STRICTURES. The above class of complaints will be removed by night ly fermenting the parts with warm water, and then by most effectually rubbing in the Ointment. Persons suffer ing from these direful complaints should lose not a mo ment in arresting their progress. It should be understood that it is not sufficient merely to smear the Ointment on the affected parts, but it must be well rubbed in fora con siderable time two or three times a day, that it may be taken into the system, whence it will remove any hidden sore or wound as effectually as though palpable to the eye. There again bread and water poultices, after the rubbing in of the Ointment, will do great service. This is the only sure treatment for females, cases of cancer In the stomach, or where there may be a general bearing down. INDISCRETIONS OF YOUTH ;-SORES AND ULCERS Blotches, as also swellings, can, with certainty, be radi cally cured if the Ointment be used freely, and the Pills taken night and morning, as recommendedju the printed instructions. When treated in any other way they only dry up in one place to break out in another; whereas this Ointment will remove the humor from the system, and leave the patient a vigorous and healthy being.— It will require time with the nee of the Pilla to insure a lasting cure. DROPSICAL SWELLINGS, PARALYSIS, AND STIFF JOiNTS. Although the above complaints differ widely in their origin and nature, yet they all require local treatment.— Many of the word cases, of each diseases, will yield in a comparatively short space of time when this Ointment Is diligently rubbed into the parts affected, even after every other means have failed. In all serious maladies the Pills should be taken according to the printed directions ac companying each box. Both the Ointment and Pals should be used in the follow• ing cases Bad legs ,Cancers, Sore ' Nipples, Bal Breasts. !Contracted k Stiff Sore throats, Burns, Joints, Skin Diseases, Bunions, Elephantiasis, Scurvy, Bite of Moschetoes Fistulas, Sore Heads, and Sandilies, 'Gout,. Tumors, Coco-bay, 'Glandular Swell- Ulcers, Chiego-foot, Lumbago, Wounds, Chili laios , Piles, Chapped Hands, Rheumatism, Corns (Soft) Scalds, CAUTION :—None are genuine unless the signature of J. HAMM, as agent for the United States, surrounds each box of Pills and Ointment. A handsome reward will be given to any one rendering such information as may lead to the detection of any party or parties coun terfeiting the medicines or vending the same, knowing them to be spnri us. Sold at the Manufactory of Professor 11oLzowsz & Co., New York, and by all respectable Druggists and Deal ers in Medicine throughout the civilized world, in pots at 25 cents, 62 cents, and $ l . each. aiy- There is cOnsichiable saving by taking the larger sizes. N. B.—Directions for the guidance of patients in every disorder are affixed to each pot. [spr2B,l6-eow-ly THE JOURNAL STORE Is the place to buy all kinds of moo too AT HARD PAN PRICES. J. R. DURBI9RROW, - J. A. NASH, The Huntingdon Journal, EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, THE NEW JOUItNAI, BUILDING, No. 212, FrFTII STREET HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA ;m 1;m OM T • it 1, '411 , 27 3 :1,7 11.6, (,C1 s., 1 32 00 p-r annum. in advance; 82.5(i within six rnonrlia. -33.00 if ilnf Tr In the Pentin , manner 'l,l a. (i/• ~ c ipi4.l 4Q It. E 00000000 firs*couxie, 60400069 f'•mn rw,h17.1 ; ; z (4 TO ADV EwnsEns belili~7l Circulation ADVERTISING MEDIUM, The JOURNAL is one of the best printed papers in the Juniata Valley, "But supposing that upon thht point you are mistaken ? If her happiness were already involved ? Hastings, be reason able. lam not a vain man, but I think she loves me." 5000 persons, thus making it the BEST "For God sake, spare me that." and is read by the best citizens in the county. It finds its way into 1800 homes weekly, and is read by at least advertising medium in Central Pennsyl- vania. Those who patronize its columns are sure of getting a rich return for their investment. Advertisements, both local and foreign, solicited, and inserted at reasonable rates. Give us an order vmgg; JOB DEPARTMENT Yawe. COLO ler All business letters should be ad dressed to J. R. DURBORROW & CO., Huntingdon, Pa ---- --, - - 7 , ..1 ---- -w -- 7 . ..,..r 1., -,:,-.Ji L' 1 !- 9 . • 0 1: , ~,..1: ,' A o M : ,,,- 1 „, --- ~i,i • g 4,, , - -.., • F rit et-. rft 4 , .r: . : CI) 11:tririal P -` '. Y :. . ' :. , ' . P t I I : • r 1 / '.. A i ill , 1 . ; • . N... • q 1 R !'.. ...., i liiit.- -.,t.;Wi..... '4... .....) • ' -A : 1 . -----1 Printing. .1. A. SASH. PUBLISHED -IN TERMS : t':c J 'i Prv)';P:lC3 4, l7 REPCSLICA If PA PM 0 0 0 0 4) isTfo7=- - FIRST-CLASS 5000 '; READERS WEEKLY i C.l NZ I CD CD 'll .cs 7Q . 1 7 PRINTING A SPECI Itlitsts' ;otticr. The Two M-steries. 'ln the middle of the room, in its white coffin, lay the dead child, a nephew of the poet. Near it, in a great chair, sat Walt Whitman, surrounded by little ones, and holding a beautiful little girl on his lap. The child looked curiously at the specta de of death, and then inquiringly into the old 1.00'3 face. 'tiou don't knew what it do you. my dear:' said he, adding, 'We don't either.'" We know not what it is, dear, this deep so deep sind stiil ; The folded hands, the awful calm, the cheek so pale and chill; The I ils that will not lift again, though we may call and call; The strange, white s,iitivie of peace that p.ttle ov We ko not what it taranl, dear, th 7 s deolatc hpa rt-puirs ; , Irp.c.l to take oar daily way, awl i try IC (Ely ,iiorD—Ctlict-. ZILLAH. yoritively rfw: ?' A renliar ;e43/14, tl/.l('h rai-zht is•tF7 fr(010 t',4e ;11/4 I , t a WoUsars 7 , 40 ITieX 10 CR prflot un eXdarnal ion of I>aio, eavie I r on, the Town 1,1 y' but do, two mew west- Z!'W , lbeil by 1.11';ire,00Ve;.%11.100 that tbq did Ira 10,,ed it, Th ere wa* a .i',4l,:rialar e',ef rast lye:•(.efo the pair, assd n', eli•erver, looking at t'oem as they }:00C1 pefrifiLly 1• gtiewd that there wo but ten year dir IPrersee it, their age 4. The first was }pan and broken in rosin, ciwek and forehead were deeply lined, and in hair and be-ird the silver threads had predoin:onte‘i Over the gold. Yet the Ul ri W 705 not more than fifty years old. His ngeti forty, appeared simply to have melsed that time in life when a creature to whom was given "dominion over all things" mews worthy of his great commission. The latter was handsome—the former had been. "I could Feared)/ have expected thif raid the sokiriZer. "And I could scarcely have expected that you would Fall in love with the girl. We were boys together." „y e "And now lam an old man, decayed and worn, while you are in the prime of life, with all the world before you. After some such fashion runs your thought, does it not ?" An answer would have involved pre varication or a lie, consequently none was made; and when the man thus questioned spoke again, it was to attack the subject from another quarter. "Will you give me a reason ?" "Certainly I will, Dalton. My reason for refusing to accept you as a son-in-law is—selfishness, pure and simple." "Yon intend that Zillah - ehall remain unmarried all her life 'I" "I intend nothing. She is happy. Let her alone." "I will not. Why should I ? It is natural, suitable. When ever yet did a man hesitate to claim the woman ho loved, knowing, feeling that she loved him ? What has your own experience been ? Did you never love some fair, fragile girl better than your own life ?" loved her mother, Dalton. Look at my bent head and withered frame, and ask me if I never loved a woman ?" "I never met her, you know." There was a half apologetic tone in the words.— The speaker had fallen unawares on a bitter theme. "No, you never met her, and probably, like a thousand others who have looked upon Zillah's swarthy cheeks, you have desired but never dared to ask 'Who was she ?' " "Aye ! who was she ?" The question made its way through the nearly-closed door, and into the room be yond, where a girl with the lustrous black eyes and full crimson lips that belonged to only one race on earth listened with an in tentness that longs for and Set dreads a coming revelation. "I wonder, Dalton," continued the older man, "if the miserable story of my life and love would make you any less in tent upon robbing me of my child ?" "I do not call it robbery." "Aye, but I do. Not robbery to take her from my heart to dwell beneath - your roof, to love and serve you, to become the mistress of your house, to cradle your children upon her breast, until she has neither time nor strength nor inclination to give a thought to me Call it what you like; the name matters little." _ _ act 0 - "You were about to tell me of her mother." "And naturally you are interested in the parentage of the girl you propose to marry. Proper solicitudp for the un blemished Dalton name is not, of course, unbecoming in the last scion of that noble race " "Have done with sneers, Hastings.— Tell your story or not, as yon please. I defy you to keep me from my wife, if I can win her." "Then have your tale, and if you do not yield to pity, perhaps you will to shame. First of all, there is half an ounce of lead in- the region of my lungs that year by year makes long-continued talking more painful. Will you grudge the service done an invalid by bringing me a glass of wine ? After that I shall offer you a chair." "It seems an impertinence, my friend," began the elder, when they were both seated, "to ask a man so young-looking as yourself to go baek into the past for such a distance as twenty years. However, it must be done, and out of the mists and obscurity I make no doubt you will re member Harry Hastings as he was." !:tr si:V,e, the I,vc.! ,~~ 'r ~ port r'l ;ce tC.I . ~. ~i P. f~ '`i ~! ~, ;%,, HUNTINGDON, PA , F "I do remember him—a handsome y,,uth. proud, talented, and the pride of he whole village where he lived." "Yes; and just in the same ratio that the whole village was found of me, I bated the village." • - "But not the village lasses." "No. Dalton. th, re are men in the world to whom the influence of women twitters little. They have little taste f;.r terests in anything Emiinine. When they love (4. marry, ther manage the business in a commonplace manner. If their wives ire congenial, very well ; if not, they have other interests or occupations. And should their who!e nviiiity! he overturned by in fidelity atol miaw, they look upon the Business L 3 'spi:Lal ni!k.' The eselandre annoys them, but they go on They sucL eeed in their profession, reach the top of the holder, and write their names on tire rdl of fiane. They decline to he victimized oy and'hoM their lives one •l'teach of the ,Lturbariees caused by do Thcr, why; Inc .IcAie —wivuo have w:;.ker 1-- Oi" ; t • i ti) Ili . ) i I : 4 I,i (pi 1.: lf) .!;'.•!. •fli tiV! It ry'r - 1,/- ,ri'l t !:rga, arv; t!) , , ~ 1; ~r • item eel r,) inhf '2, ;11,- . r:11',.! drir;f! It : ; I !he pr ,, per thing f.' , /re ro tray , .l, arid cordially as dere. , ;;.i the ha-ia!-lt or rttAirys over the f . v.e f,f clan t• - atls raii-ehr and steam b .at, I did E.:33%e roy pray to En..tiand. but •r, forther, That az:tate:4 m iw4 of liquid :oiquity. known a, the Erig:i.4l channel. ires too mini' fa me, t deelined to (re.. S•,t to Wk' rho 1 4r) :1 chind ;Airy; wooli I truet rrty frontrich 'to the oo•rey of the waves. Mg I had not told y,, a th it it wat4 opy Iniqotion 1, ,the itS artist, Nff;(ert!l , :le4*, such was the cow, The fioey. so 'intiml to, a dreamy youth with a !I , ileac coroo l i uti in, had full puses tnAl. I hved fair nr,ther nature. and I longed to reproduce votnethinz her beauty on caova•;. rio I sketched many a beautiful spot on the Awes of' Ter fidious Albion.' determined not to leave her until a grids. should be hurt t , wow : . where to protect front the .r ril4 of thy: ' Oceo,ionaliy 1. a,rit fi.fre'ety, but the pilaf English tilailm4 I. round dm acquaintance even mare intolerAble than the Yankee girls." "One morning I wandered tfirough a *mall forest. and trlifzuosed myself under a glorious old oak tree, beat upon sketching one of those strange relics of a lost faith, a heap of rocks supposed to have been in times past a Druid altar. The Druids did not inspire me, however, for I went to sleep, leaving my canvas to retain its pristine parity. Suddenly I was awakened by a violent altercation just behind my luxurious leafy couch. The contestants might have been Jewa, Turks, heretics, or any other species of heathen, so far as their language is concerned, for not a single word of it could I understand ; but a man must need have very dull ears who does not comprehend the cry of a woman who is being hurt. I sprang up and plunged in among the trees. Beore `me stood a man and gild, startled into silence by my unexpected appearance. In later years, Dalton, I have traveled in many climes and among many people, but never have I seen two more beautiful specimens of our race than the two that confronted me.— The man did not give me much time to study his swarthy, handsome face, for on catching sight of me he suddenly turned and strode in among the thicket. The girl, however, remained gazing at me with her great lustrous ' . eyes not in the least disposed to look upon me as a rescuer, but apparently doubtful whether the man just arrived were not more dangerous than the man just departed. I addressed her in English and saw at a glance that however ignorant I might be of her language, she at least was partially familiar with mine Reassured by my quiet voice, her face lost its expression of terror, and we glided in sensibly into a conversation, I exerting myself to the utmost to detain her. So bewildered was I by her extraordinary beauty that I felt the light would ,go out of the heavens if she left me. When at last she did go, I had won from her a promise to meet me there again." "By this time you have probably di vined who my wild bird of the forest was, a stray little waif from one of those wan dering tribes of Ishmaelites that civiliza tion .is so rapidly exterminating; a dusky little fairy, if fairies ever have jet black hair, delicate and graceful as a sapling, wonderfully, exquisitely beautiful. The quarrel which I had interrupted was noth ing more, it appeared, than the violent ar guments of a gypsy lover, who endeavored to forward his suit by crushing the hand he desired to possess. "Of course I fell in love with her. For this, it appears, I had passed by some of the fairest women in England and America. All my hopes of happiness and every long ing of thy soul centered by the little wood land nymph I had found in the old Druid stone. And I had no doubt that I had wen her to love me. In my besotted, idiotic infatuation I could not remember that a great impulse had been given to our ac quaintance by the surrender on my part of a large sapphire that hung from my watch chain. That cursed cotton mill in Massachusetts furnished such things too liberally for me to value them, and I could not suppose that she did. It took some time for my imagination to grasp the fact that the little hand that passed caressingly over my bosom was attracted thither by my shirt studs. And yet I dare say that lam misrepresenting her. She was so young and childish, and the passion for ornament was but the instinct of her race. "In my case the course of true love ran, or appeared to run, with remarkable smoothness. The sight of the golden cir ele that was to be her wedding ring did not alarm her, as a similar suggestion had done on the part of her last lover; and one day a romantic curate of a neighboring parish, whose acquaintance I had made, pronounced us man and wife in the very shadow of the old Druid oak. Then, in a shooting-box, amidst the Scottish heather, whither I took my bride for three short months, I indulged in the luxury of love's young dream. And she, too, was happy. It takes fully three months for a woman EZIDAY, 'LARCH 2, 1.877. to Explore all the miracle of finery and furniture with which the fashion of the present day surroundi a bride ; for, al though I had married her in her wild gypsy garb, London milliners and upholsterers had prepared her home. '•ft was knowledge that broke the charm in Eden. Well, the first cloud gathered over us upon the day I give up wandering over the hills with my gypi bride, and having unpacked.a case of books ventured to appear before her in the character of a pedagogY°. I was just explaining to her the awful meaning and significance of the letter A as it appeared on the first page of a primer, when she broke away from me and rushed away thrAigh the garden and into the cwoodt. lS,niliug at the result o the first lesson, I lit a ei! , -or and fell to dreaming of the pleasure I should yet have in guidity , my dainty little wife along the rough road that leads to knowle,:ge. It ,vould be a labor of love, and however rain - d. the result would surely repay us Loth .1!A sure! her i., , noranee was sweeter thin Tlrit very 119 i H' IS 1 , ) I i!v..; 1 r.f!t al!, ; the:: t , • t• - ; ;idle lilt awl 4: ~ ~ 01].; .1 il' i '1 .1 i ~ i r , . ;; ; 17,1,,.; ,o of the iriai in -'re for 11 , ir. At I.vt • ~; _ th.! s-rvant4 to pack ty our ii,arriel '17717 with my hride to one of the suburbs of Iz-wino. where !night have the . skilful phy.l eians to attend hcr. I will spare you the long weeki during which I had no other care in kfe than to watch river, wait np-in, arid care fOr the frail firm of a woman whose heart had long since passed oat of my ke.pirrx, if I had ever po4sessed it, rot. what I mi•took for dif4ease was noth iog more than the longing of Zangari b!nod 14 the freedom of native forests. Like a bird in a cage, I was killing her by my very care fir her. I cannot tell you how welt I loved her; less could I give yon an idea of die rapture of thanksgiving that po-c.Asell my soul on the night they pet, her baby iii u,y arms. and odd me her lif! was safe. Yet mindfal of my duties 'l4 a Ilfort. I quickly surrendered the infan tile wonder, and hastened to accompany the weary physician to the door of our house. I lingered a moment, watching him as be pi , •:-ed the gate. when suddenly thPre darted from among the trees the same figure that had grown to l'arniiiar in the SeottiA Highlands, The moonEglit fell a the hanthoorne face. mei snowed the same anxious expression my own had worn du ring die past weeks. The man seized the doctor by the :sins, apparently asked ISOlle eager yite,tion, to which he received an affirmative answer, and then disappeared. "I Dever saw him but once mo-re. A month later—l had nursed my darling back to health—when, coming back from a abort journey to London. I saw a carriage delving rapidly away from my gate. There were only two occupants—my wife and her gypsy lover. Instinctively I rush ed toward them and seized the horses by the bridle. Then a sadden flash, followed by a report, and the bullet intended for my heart buried itself in my lungs -I cannot toll you what followed. All I know is that when I saw my child again it waP over three months old. After that I went mad. They tell me I wandered about from place to place all over Europa, while peopl3 won l .red at the %ilitnt man. ever in motion, and alwayi acclatpanied by a nurse and an infant child. At last a circumstance roused me. The news came that the executors of my father's will had contrived to lose my fortune, and I was poor. Then we came to New York—my little Zillah, whom I named after my moth er, and I. Here we have lived, Dalton ; here have I dragged cut the miserable ex istence of an invalid; here I have brought up my child from infancy to womanhood, until she has become to be something of what her mother might have been ; here we have been together, through better, through worse, and much of it has been worse. Now you propose to take her from me, knowing that she is all I have in the world = that whatever she may be to you, I cannot live without her. It is an awk ward thing to wind all one's heart about a woman, be she wife or child I have done it, and mine is a claim no man should die pute. Will you withdraw your demand, Dalton ? Methinks there is a parallel to it in the story of David and Udall." "Did you ever hear of the mother again, Hastings ?" "Only that she died. The habits of her people, where marriage bonds are quickly shaken loose when love fails, made it seem no crime to leave me; but when the wild desire to be free was gratified, they say she pined and died. But you have not answered my question. Will you leave my child ?" "Will you let her decide ?" In the silence that followed, Zillah stood in the doorway. Slender and beautiful, with the longing of love in the soft, dark eyes, and the stern rigor of determination around her month, the clear voice answer ed, "I have decided." "To become Dalton's wife ?" queried the bitter voice of the invalid. A single word, sharp with pain, cut the air—•`Never !" "Yet you love me, Zillah ?" pleaded the lover. This time tbo girl spoke with less effort "No, I do not." Angry and sullen, Dalton went his way. Yet she did love him, and both he and Hastings knew it. Now the glories of self-sacrifice are not for the weak. When the human heart be comes the scene of fierce struggle the body that contains it must needs be strong. Zil lah's passionate prayer for strength to en dure her trial was answered by increasing weakness, and once more Hastings watched a woman he loved better than his life, fa ding before his eyes. From afar off he saw the end approaching, and knew that he must let her go No word was needed be tween the two; but each understood all the other would have said, when the father finally announced, "I have written to Dal ton," and the girl bowed her head upon his head and answered, "I tried, indeed I tried." Then the roses bloomed again in the gypsy cheeks; but the step of the in valid grew slower and slower, and that fa tal burden of lead pressed even more heav ily into the weakened lungs. White and cold were the catnelias that graced the wedding, and white and cold gleamed the same flowers within a coffin ere the year was out. Exhausted by her w „r riot» prev . ;(p).,i, 'pr.! ,uve. tO tiolveve ir. I; I. ;ct-f V. :I! It! L i. It • .• . i :, ; ~.~, I'll I:1 hitter sorrow. Dalton left his wife , to foiior the sad procesgion winding toward a grave As he turned away from the freshly-heap ed mound, he murmured : "It is the story of Jean l'Alj,nn and Casette over again ;" and translated into bungling English, he repeated the lines that close the hi-tory 4 that sorrlwful life: "lie sleeps, though living he was sorely tr:e•t: He suffered when hie and left him. died Au peacefully and get).:y a. ►he day When the snn leave; it, inte eveninz fa(P. Jimmy *dui )11i5ctlianD. How to Push Business. One or'9ar ex( bar•gts very p , rtinentiy ;einarkl that Caere are a ‘zr.vr. r,any (1,1 fogie4--Lotably many—wl•.!) tin ourpi pieas ti) tin hves: :1 1:!t4 ion ;• - b Its yin:nth - 'ir ries, p I;) lie •r. : LiV,f I • it t "r•) i•i r tar f ,r r , , - 11.1 : r Wi. rim int.) aroi c:11! h'r ,•4 ad - i7e-rti.i-17. T. roin.l . er :in n,•x: 1,y4 t^ pi" pit, is 'l"h•!. , r .r p,r•fl• -f estiihii4i,iiert:a are rl. - '114;..! Ise ad certi4-rr.ents The truth i 4 a rrlri tanner do hosiness witliont al-rrkiorr. aq.l the only toestion :n1•1 he. the way :n d , , it. If you have a 1,4 of personal property t.. which is hest. to write nut a few no tiees that not r, .e in fifty will atop 70 read or to ro to , the printer and have a 'int rx well displayed posters in additi •n an advertisement in the papers? If yon are in need of help. don't ask your neiyhhor'a wife if she kn..ms of a girl. hat ra,ke your want known through ay newspapers, and yon will have plenty of en4t,mers n••vt morning to fi:l the place. I: yo•i are in I,ll9ine tTany id if. wit foetter to keep rfaro,!!: before the priht'or eye in y:•itr own parr by an advertisement that will stare your friends anti enstrymers in the fare every day, rather than trust to the old fogy idea of Oh. they all know me ?" lint Mr Closefist says nrlvertisin7 costs ro. - ,ney. Very true. and everything and it ii a :1 , 4 you that aivertisintr does If it did not. every little worthless e meets w4uld stand as good a ehanee of balm known as the very heat and most soiefni 11 you want the people to know that yon have anything to sell. advertise in y•eir borne paper first, then in your seighbor ing papers The ni-in who bat a reps.& ble business sad spends the most in a lib eral system of advertising. is the one wbo makes the most money. This is truth well verified by those who have tried it Those who don't believe it have just to east about in their own town. and they will find that the most prrrspetnus busimen are they who advertise liberally and ii dielonsly. We are now in the eighteen-4! meat of an important yeir and the hnsi• nem public should not eloie its eys ;o a well known fact that the apprulich of win ter is always the hei,!. Aeasnil f• , r trade. People have vrints ja4:.:a th,•r h ive in prosperous They by, ;rid be sure to tro to 11,, , • - • who otftr tit • beat b irg r,s. And Col t ottlA wi•!ey known is fi.olu-nt, annolin,e meats through the paper.i. Try the tzi-! riment. Remedy for Trouble. Work is a true remedy. If misfortune hits you bard, you bit something else hard ; pitch into something with a will. There's nothing like good, solid exhausting work *to cure trouble. If yon have met with losses you don't want to lie awake and think about them. You want sleep—calm, sound sleep—and eat your dinner with ap petite. But you can't unless you work.— If you say you don't feel like wori, and go loafing all day to tell Tom, Dick, and Harry the story of your woes, you'll lie awake, and keep your wife awake by your tossing, spoil your temper and your break. fast next morning, and begin to-morrow feeling ten times worse than you do to day. There are some great troubles that only time can heal, and perhaps some that never can be 'healed at all ; but all can be helped by the great panacea, work. Try it, you who are afflicted. It is not a patent medicine. It has proved its efficiency since first Adam and Eve left behind them, with weeping, their beautiful Eden. It is an efficient remedy. All good physicians in regular standing prescribe it in cases of mental and moral disease. It operates kindly as well, leaving no disagreeable sequelae, and we assure you that we have taken a large quantity of it with most beneficial results. It will care more com plaints than any nostrum in the mossieria media', and comes nearer to being a "mire all" than any drug or compound of drurs in the market. And it wi.l not sicken you if you do not take it sugar coated. Wonders of an Alabama Lake. At the Dickson place, on Ballard Creek, near six-mile station,is a ten acre field which is nothing more nor less than a subterra nean lake, covered with soil about eighteen inches deep. On the soil is cultivated a field of corn, which will produce thirty or forty bushels to the acre. If any one will take the trouble to dig a hole the depth of a spa'le handle, he will find it to fill with water, and by using a hook and line, fi,l3 four or five inches long can be caught. These fish are different from others in not having either scales or eyes. and are perch like in shape. The ground is black marl. alluvial in its nature, and in all probabili ty at one time it was an open body of wa ter on which was act,umulated vegetable matter which has been measured from time to time, until it has a crwit sufficient ly thick to bear the weight of a horse. While nooning the field hands catch great strings of delicate fish by merely punching a hole through the earth. The whole sec tion of country surrounding this field gives evidence of marshiness. an I the least show er of rain produces an abundance of mud But the question comes up, has not this' body an outlet ? Although blackish the water tastes as if fresh, and we hav• no doubt that it is andythingelse but stagnant. Yet these fish are eyeless—similar to those found in caves. 1,17 4 i n ti! •r }).;:;rar t;rl!i !..n; • •I• .ten -~~` . r• 6 ••f .~ 7: 4 I,,rti ; si) RI.. LigMs. r r.A L Pr.t.‘4o , lTror alt LA TIL-4 •)11111 7" ..7 s 3 rgaln WM, 3 411300011 .• .3 SO • 1.41 E W .17ILart" 1. et - RE4 Air , PAIII4 .1" alas* !Elio ' WITTI R :TATTnv TT;if Ati:SIT . Froze tis. ['hawk:phi,. neg. 1 hare read with ninth sottattinn y oir s. r uti or• wig. minis. die 9 40 44 5 . Wit article in to day . 4 Time. •• W m , non at •swa. aw,t .- ra. tai4olllP IP. n!tho , r,zh t: tio ,- !nrei .r.th a 4piee stelw* &Lieber" Ihrlemlll.ll4.B . . t . irer i.ot i t 3 , in t h at v.re ''" ) a 4 GNI sea marropmsisse less rh••pr.-w of oar city i 4 iwskenrrl 'R'" aralia g tram i:1 •m; t..r?.r th..con4itieration , )f in 'be ..rit Wow sur Sethise Ilerimpok sow stihjt•et th,it h 34 irtrwcyseti the inter.( snii "./ • 1 " " Se lla I° W 42 - ' lll . . 1 . 119 . 6 excited the hr vic inr-sii.t. : 4 " •" " 41 `ei" r" - ?- throo4h , .rit tlw !en•rth Intl b•ewth .):* or :awl. to e:rder chit. y“n date h.e7 • ...t n r leriaito: mad re:.abie tartraritir‘n •fl ,ableet I entlininnie.te bereiritit s er.Dy ;.Jo tette'''. :hit l hay.. Tiloy if.! io r.v, . J ;.' I .4. J , nn—Uv I)st 'ti'r'e iaret j•tivts♦ r!,• ••I 4 lft rn f.? IT.. ;m. wh•rY I Its I ,-!! • • • • I 117 !so. ' • • !I r r, I. T , i n 1.1 •1 :r. r• 1 F krith* ,ionP: - e,ron,r..r . cite 744-o V •rir c, ri; n 1 .I.l4elts.mt r Jannar7 31. ?to wmre G. 71. A. P' , 4.pwrals--47 flair 4:1 , • .ttowf 7,n hy Milli -4 °fp, ffr.t..fti ,M , r r,tt.,tsini*g j.d7 7.,0r 'A I' Timor snl twin. 1%14 r•pnbli•-•aine th. ;.tt.r.. - rrate4 an intr.rmilovemi leisand p:aper4. nbnA •',. z 1..!.h Ay.• wow, ' orri.ry for 1,-. fuse 7v , mtipettretria ettablianntrnifil rote" ..nttrtor •strrortrrott Try• two : ,, t , ri :117• In brio g /11 , 1,4 1 1.7•60 WORM tut,. Anti yr.. ~.•"1 ',et? .1.• 1 , 04111 fe PP, 10 , 14 1 1r• afrITIN. f lig. von, '..sr ne-../ an •• ..t.try If •t , ,to , n4atinn no., 7 3 , • pnrgtoirge; •r 4 yr/7 , 7V.. 1 , 11 v 4 1* ,r,f ti pi.m mif w..yrii4.l'. I 'bin., ltta t , nr , - , f mt. tlrtnirttnti•gtn. Iry ir:IT sra viovil. :.•• • ~OZ .•1• •• *y. !: rt.: Vl' Pet i 1 i ifrek4n`: The :TPA: 14Pftrr M i a Z 0 4 0 .. 1140 , ... T . of .01,-7 rapn• 0 0 5 , ' 101. r*TTNIPThg A Me.P r ivo ad A4ierw. 0 " vwsorr. Yonr•-r .4 J . Paw«, hn•--Dhas 4 313 144 :0 : -r - oreo‘o.l 3:1 • ft - 1 h'./. r t 4.4 1 , 0.4 - e .4 :4 O' - yd. 4 . . T.- 4C*. fr •oi 11.-rttoit. - w,4,.1ute.• r 'vv.* Toor:vif or OW oarao gar.og . r.. 4 ;to . fearily ant plvo.v.i •.• rvpor• et • fv.,•• Illy if. bead the ,elleameterf rberomowiwaw Air , nq sot we. walinwt *Op rpwwwwee preseriptiomt holed to 4.• shy Apo... we Ww• Opp, - w.s• revirrell sie4 tim meet /rya try ly woodorfol. Is foot 4ay. A. amid esti *boot the borne witli ewworowsbcc •••• 111.0 Elk ie set all nt 414 Orr bee. Wavy vibe vim a rbild Sae crier for.? '..tft b.r v.th ay va bargemen; of tbv throat, ~ iworb geiervo4 "Ls! the 4rev• hvi :o be maiviv ,ovitiVlvra•••• , ben it way vlcirrre tisbe. Tb• . •blne 2 , ,504'" ^ , •rir Ampy fer?, hair sb boar Pea, 4ay i . 74/ITw rksie;.• 'ernes the eienrrostient 're , * osterearisewe 44 : )4 , 1, 1 1-4-3: :4 iin+• s anti' m u n e weri. •• • Illylnz man? 044 eiram4 Mier/ i he o 4 tr:4 y .(1. 441 irrntefel se sey • .• , 9 to 7,4. 1 sea T., , ora very r. 4,44.4•111. itaitww.es thig •:, • J".•i ; riot./ up 'WA dri. r .; Thu are I:• t' . 1..,::. tif,t ezpieeattit.: nP..r Ail; ° . • tg..it thenriei nr phrivo I:1 1 • h0...1 f.,r•••111, therel.r. , . in th , inse/ttk.tkm netineen vein jertn, diArnar.l ail those thenripil irlsourb wr31 , 1 tspit:n the phennntona, sod after moth .ta , iy in l reli,•-r 36 nouoci the..neA which tSeofr farts that n.,no “tact (tan 4. We way r• eret t., pint with the ther)ry orossi•stkin ; the un , lotintory theory of iisiot. as l ~( tbt inf-ande-wenee nr the veto. but the truth is mighty and strait prwvaii 1:•-ipeetfolly yours. A. J . PLICAS4I,IIIII,II CRVIATION is to be visreded. and .n -stead of ilestrayin; the corpse by ire. se the ancients did, or inakinz :as -' the same, as had been swzgeeted, se investor of GrenoLle, France, proposes the oppnaite method, and preserves then forever. -At the deera-te of an individual the !Indy io plunged into a liquid invented by bin, and in about five years the individual is tamed into stone. The serret of the petrification is known only to the diwoverer not the goes further Ile Sys that in amalgam' years time, if persons will only preserve their relatives and friesolo. they win he able to buikl a bonne with them and th live in a residence surrounded by their ancestors Another applicatiow of this process, has been solgested. to have the petrified corp.., nickel plated with brooms. and ir a statue of an individual is denired to pl.tee the corpse on a proper pndestaJ, so as to rolfiii the functions of being the statue of the party deceased. hn ri•nE A SORB TaILOA r —A Cnrf , ".• pondent of r New York paper, who asys he has orten tried it, furnishes the frdloys -44; remedy for a -ore throat : Let each amp ,if pus half million rewire, buy at any dm , : !note one °tinge of earn phorate oil, and fiYo cents worth of chloram of pota,h. Whenever any «Irene,. Amen in the thrryit put the rtaeh is half • tumbler of water, rid with it 4arile the throat thoroughly, then rib' the seal thorough!y with the ramphorired ~il et night bet*, rr going to besi, alma 0111 around the throat a .rnall strip of wastes flannel This is a simple. ehrap and sere remedy. TEI c *a 11 the largest of eemeteri,s, sod its numbers sleep without ssoisensents.— A f i other grave yarie, in other lama. show some distinction between the great mei the small, the rich and the r•et. bet is the great ocean cemetery the kind and clown, the print.► and peasant, are alike undistinguished The awe wave, roil over All ; the same respires by intnetreis of the ocean is Innz to their hewn-. I)►er thetr remains the some ,mess beat, sod the same sun shines, and there. tsalusisried. the weak and the powerful. the plumed and the uniionored, will sleep on forever. 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J. 111111111110111 !meg imailber es .b• Syr • parsing for *WOW ind 4 IV O. tram an bee aim widow* • ONO peter*. mill 4 Janes, II Or/ awiler se i•• um* pre* bebtieems• be•pe sp bee diereerey• des :seem ew ••yeeral ecallbse sward nor rewired? owe y Carbeemy: Insebyey ineb Wyk., silmililllo4 se lbw wee seer y as Dessialp ; old • sprier ef emesor. w wig MANY synyoul sf f. erarbuse vow ereseremy lbeireefasys• provms t •• by Os ibrAmed Lofty • Tbir Prioross Lemma :• smervaise iso be • NMI tarsiateer It ,4p Mood ONO eras IPiw. sorbs brimegibt sr d 1 b•P ebilh•••• villbors siesbef seen rbry own, ops•usaw• aim winernd by Os derior. Taw yossyse filer 114pilif • Servied 411aellani /NO lIIND se Now se so depot Ise 1111,11011 oar dr lirlh is sue alk sf►. 9. Slag Ilows. if laft, r,! ;AV,' 1....1. ir .peroPirt7l '4•Toury., mss• %fad 4 , • 7. wr. wenitiee 4.- • 7,,•4 - 4 , 1, • Airetibi• ' - hintst , w.f..... 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